- Title
- Assessment of Sentinel-6 SAR mode and reprocessed Jason-3 sea level measurements over global coastal oceans
- Creator
- Peng, Fukai; Deng, Xiaoli; Shen, Yunzhong
- Relation
- ARC.DP220102969
- Relation
- Remote Sensing of Environment Vol. 311, Issue 1 September 2024, no. 114287
- Publisher Link
- http://dx.doi.org/10.1016/j.rse.2024.114287
- Publisher
- Elsevier BV
- Resource Type
- journal article
- Date
- 2024
- Description
- With dedicated coastal processing strategies and advanced Delay-Doppler technique, the quality of altimeter data from Low-Resolution Mode (LRM) and Synthetic Aperture Radar (SAR) mode altimeters in coastal areas have been greatly improved. In this study, we present a new 20-Hz along-track sea level anomaly (SLA) dataset of Jason-3 within 100 km to the global coastlines using the modified SCMR (Seamless Combination of Multiple Retrackers) processing strategy. The new reprocessed Jason-3 dataset, along with Sentinel-6 Michael Freilich (MF) SAR mode data, are evaluated and validated over global coastal oceans. The evaluation results show that the modified SCMR has significantly increases the data availability by 16%–67% for Jason-3 when compared to the official SGDR MLE4 dataset, especially in the last 5 km to the coast. The resultant data availability retains >90% beyond 5 km to the coast and 80% within 5 km to the coast, which is slightly higher (2%–10%) than that obtained by the Sentinel-6 MF. Most importantly, the modified SCMR mitigates the hump artifacts observed for the SLA spectrums of LRM altimeters, which makes the noise level of 20-Hz SLA estimates from Jason-3 (5.52 cm) comparable with that from Sentinel-6 MF (5.42 cm). This result demonstrates that the modified SCMR strategy would improve the LRM altimeters' capability of monitoring the mesoscale eddies. The evaluation results also show that the Sentinel-6 MF SAR mode data obtain higher data precision but lower data availability than reprocessed Jason-3 LRM data, especially in the 0–5 km coastal strip and mid-to-high latitude (>40°N or < 40°S) regions. Although the quality of altimeter data in the 0–5 km coastal strip has been significantly improved, the validation results against tide gauges demonstrate that the degraded performance still occurs when compared to the results beyond 5 km offshore. The significant discrepancy between tide gauge records and altimeter data is found in places such as sheltered bays and archipelagos where the land contamination is severe, and thus the development of dedicated coastal retrackers and corrections for SAR mode altimeters is still of great importance. Finally, the good consistency between reprocessed Jason-3 LRM and Sentinel-6 MF SAR mode altimeter datasets has been found by examining the inter-mission SLA biases (−0.12 ± 0.01 m).
- Subject
- Jason-3; Sentinel-6 MF; coastal monitoring; modified SCMR; tide gauges; SDG 14; Sustainable Development Goals
- Identifier
- http://hdl.handle.net/1959.13/1509715
- Identifier
- uon:56285
- Identifier
- ISSN:0034-4257
- Language
- eng
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